THE RISE OF CIVILIZATION Early River Valley Civilizations: 3500 B.C.–450 B.C

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THE RISE OF CIVILIZATION Early River Valley Civilizations: 3500 B.C.–450 B.C. Chapter 2. THE BIG FOUR AREAS. Civilizations emerge and develop on fertile river plains in Mesopotamia (Tigris Euphrates) Egypt (Nile), Indus Valley (Indus) China (Huang He). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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THE RISE OF CIVILIZATIONEarly River Valley Civilizations:

3500 B.C.–450 B.C

Chapter 2

THE BIG FOUR AREAS

• Civilizations emerge and develop on fertile river plains in

• Mesopotamia (Tigris Euphrates)• Egypt (Nile), • Indus Valley (Indus)• China (Huang He)

The firsts……WHAT DO THEY ALL HAVE IN COMMON?

How did geography effect the development of early civilizations?

Location Climate Physical landscape How do they irrigate crops? What crops do they grow? How do they trade, over land, rivers, seas? How do they interact with the environment? Many more questions to ask………

Essay Question

At the end of this unit part of your test will be to answer the following essay question

How did geography effect the development of early civilizations?

What to do: Plan and Organize Begin to gather your facts: You will take notes on civilizations

in each of the 4 river valleys As you copy notes underline anything that you see that has

to do with geography Begin to organize these facts into categories Try to find several common themes that all the areas share You will be allowed to bring in your organized notes to

compose this essay You will have 1 class period to compose your response to this

question. You must complete this essay in class.

*

*

NEXT

SECTION 1

SECTION 2

SECTION 3

SECTION 4

City-States in Mesopotamia

Pyramids on the Nile

Planned Cities on the Indus

River Dynasties in China

Four Early River Valley Civilizations

Indus River

Nile River

Tigris-Euphrates River

Huang-He River

1. floods are unpredictable; sometimes no rain

2. land offers no barriers to invasion 3. land has few natural resources;

building materials scarce

Environment poses 3 disadvantages:

Solving Problems Through Organization

Sumerians worked together; find solutions toenvironmental challenges:

build irrigation ditches to control water and

produce crops build walled cities for defense trade grain, cloth, and tools for raw

materials—stone, wood metal Organization, leadership, and laws are

beginning of civilization

Sumerian City-States

Each is a city-state—an independent political

unit Sumer city-states Uruk, Kish, Lagash,

Umma, and Ur Each city has temple and ziggurat; priests

appeal to gods

Priests and Rulers Share Control

• Sumer’s early governments a theocracy

The Spread of Cities • By 2500 B.C. many new cities in

Fertile Crescent Sumerians exchange products and ideas

with other cultures Cultural diffusion—process of one

culture spreading to others

UR’s

UR’S Artifacts

Gilgamesh Epic Tablet:Flood Story written in cuneiform

polytheism A Religion of Many Gods Gods are thought to control forces of nature Gods behave as humans do, but people

are gods’ servants Life after death is bleak and gloomy

Sumerian Science and Technology

• Sumerians invent wheel, sail, and plow; first to

use bronze • Make advances in arithmetic and geometry • Develop arches, columns, ramps and

pyramids for building • Have complex system of writing—cuneiform • Study astronomy, chemistry, medicine

CUNEIFORM

Innovations ** Arithmetic and Geometry

They developed a number system with a base of 60. Architectural

Arches, columns, ramps, and the pyramid shape of the ziggurats permanently influenced Mesopotamian civilization.

Cuneiform Sumerians created a writing system.

NEXT

The First Empire Builders

Continued . . .

SECTION

Sargon Sargon of Akkad • Around 2350 B.C., Sargon from Akkad

defeats city-states of Sumer • Creates first empire—independent states

undercontrol of one leader: United all Mesopotamia city states

• His dynasty lasts about 200 years * Akkadians used own language but adopted

Sumerian religious and farming practices Sargon dies and so does his empire soon after

Time of War•From 3000 to 2000 B.C.E. city-states at constant war

The World’s First Empire [Akkadians]

Babylonian Empire

Amorites also called nomadic warriors, take control of region around

2000 B.C.Make Babylon, on

Euphrates River, the capital

BABYLONIAN WRITING

Hammurabi: brought all of Mesopotamia under his control.

City of Babylon becomes major trade center

**Hammurabi’s Law CodeHammurabi’s greatest achievement*Collected laws from city-states and created a law code for entire region engraved in stone and made public

• 282 sections mostly dealing with daily life: specific punishments for actions

**Set different punishments depending on social class, gender

Strong government to increase economic prosperity of people

Hammurabi’s Code was the first written law code

NEXT

SECTION

1Babylonian Society

Social Classes: Kings,

priests, nobles

artisans, merchants, scribes, farmers, slaves

Slaves are those captured in war

___________________________________________________

Assyrians

civilization is remembered for their great fighting ability and their great cruelty. Assyrian rule peaked about 650 BCE

Chaldean civilization

*began about 600BCE interested in

astronomy, Chaldeans named the days of the week after planets: Saturn:

SaturdayMonday moon day Sunday : Sun day

Ruled by Nebuchadnezzar

Hanging Gardens of Babylon built by Nebuchadnezzer, ruler of the Chaldeans

Persian Civilization 550 BCE

East of Mesopotamia Great Rulers of Persia: Cyrus the Great and Darius Great Empire Built Roads: Had Mail **Persia is now the country of Iran

1. Sumerians: first known Mesopotamian Civilization2. Akkadians: Lead by Sargon: first empire builders3. Babylonians: lead by Hammurabi first written law code4. Assyrians: Known for extreme cruelty; great warriors5. Chaldeans: known for studying astronomy: named a few days of the week6. Persians: great empire lead by Daruis and Cyrus the Great and known for building roads

Chronological list of Mesopotamian Civilizations

Section 1 is completed, make sure to organize for essay question

How did geography effect the development of the Mesopotamian civilizations???

How did geography effect the development of early civilizations?

Location Climate Physical landscape How do they irrigate crops? What crops do they grow? How do they trade, over land, rivers, seas? How do they interact with the environment? Many more questions to ask………

NEXT

Using mathematical knowledge and engineering skills, Egyptians build magnificent monuments to honor dead rulers.

Section 2

Pyramids on the Nile

Pyramids

The Geography of Egypt

Egypt’s Settlements •Arise along the 4,100-mile Nile River on narrow strip of fertile land

The Gift of the Nile • Yearly flooding brings water and fertile black

mud—silt (inundation of the Nile) • Farmers build irrigation system for wheat and barley

crops • Egyptian’s worship Nile as a god

NEXT

Continued . . .

The Annual Flooding of the Nile

The Annual Flooding of the Nile

NEXT

SECTION

2

Environmental Challenges

•Light floods reduce crops, cause starvation

•Heavy floods destroy property; deserts isolate and protect Egyptians

Ancient Egypt

Upper Egypt and Lower Egypt

• River area south of First Cataract is elevated,becomes Upper Egypt

• Cataract—where boulders turn Nile River into churning rapids

• River area north, including Nile delta, becomes Lower Egypt

• Delta—land formed by silt deposits at mouth of river; triangular

Famous Pharaohs Narmer/Menes: United Upper and Lower

Egypt Invasion from Hyksos: Conquered Egypt

Middle Kingdom with new weapons and horse drawn chariots

Hatshepsut: Pharaoh, stepmother to Thutmose, built elaborate funeral temple, Valley of the Kings

Amenhotep /Akhenaton (Aton): Pharaoh: Monotheism, changes name, changed religion from polytheism to monotheism

Famous Pharaohs Nefertiti: Married to Akhenaton, very beautiful Tutankhamen: Son of Akhenaton, back to

polytheism, Murdered at 18, tomb found untouched by Carter in 1922 in the Valley of the Kings

Ramses II: The great builder, 52 sons, ruled for 67 years, dies at 90, Empire weakens after his death, sent Moses on Exodus

Egypt falls to the Kushites from the south and the Libyans from the west

Pharaohs Rule as Gods

• To the Egyptians, kings are gods; Egyptian god

kings called pharaohs • Pharaohs control religion, government,

army, well-being of kingdom • Government based on religious authority— theocracy

*

King Narmer (aka Menes) Creates Egyptian Dynasty • Villages of Egypt ruled by two kingdoms—Lower Egypt, Upper Egypt

• King Narmer unites them around 3000 B.C.; makes Memphis capital

• Establishes first Egyptian dynasty

NEXT

Egypt Unites into a Kingdom

Continued . . .

SECTION

2

KING TUT: The child king ruled Egypt more than 3,000 years ago from the of age 8 until he was 17. There have always been questions as to whether he was truly related to the pharaohs who ruled before him.

QUEEN NEFERTITI

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SECTION

2Sarcophagus Builders of the Pyramids • Kings believed to rule even after death; have

eternal life force, ka • Build elaborate tombs, pyramids, to meet needs after death • Pyramids made with blocks of stone, 2-15 tons each; 481 ft. high • Kingdom had leadership, government; economically strong

NEXT

Egyptian Culture

Religion and Life• Egyptians believe in 2,000 gods and

goddesses—polytheistic• Re is sun god, Osiris, god of the dead; goddess

Isis is ideal woman • Believe in life after death; person judged by

deeds at death• Develop mummification, process that prevents

body from decaying• Book of the Dead contains prayers and spells,

guides soul after death

DO NOT COPY: Why do you think the heart was

weighed against a feather??

NEXT

Image

Egyptian Writing

In hieroglyphics writing system, pictures

represent ideas Paper like sheets

made from papyrus reeds used for writing

Social Classes

Society shaped like pyramid, from Pharaoh down to farmers, laborers

•Few people at top have great power; most people at bottom •People move into higher social classes through marriage or merit •Women have many of the same rights as men

Hieroglyphics

Rosetta Stone

The discovery of the Rosetta Stone was very important. It contained many languages on one stone. This discovery allowed people tp read Hieroglyphics

NEXT

Egyptian Science and Technology• Egyptians invent calendar of 365 days and 12 months• Develop system of written numbers and a form ofgeometry• Skilled engineers and architects construct palaces, pyramids• Egyptian medicine famous in the ancient world

SECTION

Section 1 is completed, make sure to organize for essay question

How did geography effect the development of the Mesopotamian civilizations???

How did geography effect the development of early civilizations?

Location Climate Physical landscape How do they irrigate crops? What crops do they grow? How do they trade, over land, rivers, seas? How do they interact with the environment? Many more questions to ask………

Planned Cities on the Indus

The first Indian civilization builds well-planned cities on the banks of the Indus River.

NEXT

Continued . . .

Indian Subcontinent

•Subcontinent landmass that includes India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh

Himalayas World’s tallest mountain ranges

separate it from rest of Asia

Rivers, Mountains, and Plains

• Mountains to north, desert to east, protect Indus

Valley from invasion • Indus and Ganges rivers from flat,

fertile plain—the Indo-Gangetic • Southern India, a dry plateau flanked

by mountains • Narrow strip of tropical land along

coast

NEXT

SECTION Monsoons

• Seasonal winds—monsoons—dominate India’s climate

• Winter winds are dry; summer winds bring rain can cause flooding

Environmental Challenges

• Floods along the Indus unpredictable; river can change course

• Rainfall unpredictable; could have droughts or floods

Indus Valley Civilization

• Influenced an area larger than Mesopotamia or Egypt

Earliest Arrivals • About 7000 B.C., evidence of

agriculture and domesticated animals

• By about 3200 B.C., people farming in villages along Indus River

.

Planned Cities

• By 2500 B.C., people build cities of brick laid out on grid system

• Engineers create plumbing and sewage systems

• Indus Valley called Harappa civilization after

Harappa, a city

Harrapan

NEXT

Harappan Planning

• City built on mud-brick platform to protect against flood waters

• Brick walls protect city and citadel—central buildings of the city

• Streets in grid system are 30 feet wide

• Lanes separate rows of house (which featured bathrooms)

Indus Civilization

Indus Valley contd..

Contributions to the World: They had grid systems as well as plumbing and sewage systems.

Harappan Culture

Language • Had writing systems of 400

symbols; but scientists can’t decipher it

Culture • Harappan cities appear uniform

in culture; no great social divisions • Animals important to the culture;

toys suggest prosperity

NEXT

SECTION

Harappan

Role of Religion • Priests closely linked to rulers • Some religious artifacts reveals

links to modern Hindu culture

Trade • Had thriving trade with other

peoples, including Mesopotamia

NEXT

SECTION

NEXT

SECTION

3

Harappan Decline

• Signs of decline begin around 1750 B.C.

• Earthquakes, floods, soil depletion may have caused decline

• Around 1500 B.C., Aryans enter area and become dominant

Ancient China

NEXT

Section 4

River Dynasties in ChinaEarly rulers introduce ideas about government and society that shape Chinese civilization.

NEXT

SECTION

4The Geography of China

Barriers Isolate China Ocean, mountains, deserts isolate

China from other areas

Environmental Challenges

• Huang He floods can devour whole villages

• Geographic isolation means lack of trade; must be self-sufficient

The Geography of China

Environmental Challenges

• Huang He floods can devour whole villages

• Geographic isolation means lack of trade; must be

self-sufficient

River Systems

• Huang He (“Yellow River”) in north, Yangtze in south

• Huang He leaves loess—fertile silt—when it floods

China’s Heartland

• North China Plain, area between two rivers, center of civilization

Chinese Civilization

Civilization Emerges in Shang Times

The First Dynasties• Around 2000 B.C. cities arise; Yu, first ruler of Xia Dynasty• Yu’s flood control systems tames Huang He• Shang Dynasty, 1700 to 1027 B.C., first to leave

written records

NEXT

SECTION

Zhou and the Dynastic Cycle

The Zhou Take Control In 1027 B.C., Zhou Dynasty takes control of

China

Mandate of Heaven Mandate of Heaven—the belief that a just

ruler had divine approval Developed as justification for change in

power to Zhou

NEXT

Continued . . .

Control Through Feudalism

• Feudalism—system where kings give land to nobles in exchange for services

Religious Beliefs

• Spirits of dead ancestors can affect family fortunes

• Priests scratch questions on animal bones and tortoise shells

• Oracle bones used to consult gods; supreme god, Shang Di

Development of Writing

• Writing system uses symbols to represent syllables; not ideas

• People of different languages can use same system

• Huge number of characters make system difficult to learn

Chinese Civilization

• Sees China as center of world; views others as uncivilized

• The group is more important than the individual

Family

• Family is central social institution; respect for parents a virtue

• Elder males control family property • Women expected to obey all men,

even sons

Social Classes

• King and warrior-nobles lead society and own the land

Improvements in Technology and Trade

• Zhou Dynasty builds roads, canals to improve transportation

• Uses coins to make trade easier

• Produces cast iron tools and weapons

food production increases

What to do: Plan and Organize

Begin to gather your facts: You will take notes on civilizations in each of the 4 river valleysAs you copy notes underline anything that you see that has to do with geographyBegin to organize these facts into categoriesTry to find several common themes that all the areas shareYou will be allowed to bring in your organized notes to compose this essayYou will have 1 class period to compose your response to this question. You must complete this essay in class.

Essay Question

At the end of this unit part of your test will be to answer the following essay question How did geography effect the

development of early civilizations?

How did geography effect the development of early civilizations?Location

Climate

Physical landscape

How do they irrigate crops?

What crops do they grow?

How do they trade, over land, rivers, seas?

How do they interact with the environment?

Many more questions to ask………

Innovations

Roads and canals were built to stimulate trade and agriculture.

Coined money was introduced, which further improved trade.

Blast furnaces that produced cast iron.

Old Chinese Money

What to do: Plan and Organize Begin to gather your facts: You will take notes on civilizations

in each of the 4 river valleys As you copy notes underline anything that you see that has

to do with geography Begin to organize these facts into categories Try to find several common themes that all the areas share You will be allowed to bring in your organized notes to

compose this essay You will have 1 class period to compose your response to this

question. You must complete this essay in class.

Essay Question

At the end of this unit part of your test will be to answer the following essay question

How did geography effect the development of early civilizations?

How did geography effect the development of early civilizations?

Location Climate Physical landscape How do they irrigate crops? What crops do they grow? How do they trade, over land, rivers, seas? How do they interact with the environment? Many more questions to ask………

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